- Fernão
Lopes de
Castanheda (Santarém, c. 1500 – 1559 in Coimbra) was a
Portuguese historian in the
early Renaissance. His "History of the
discovery and...
-
Travel literature especially flourished: João de Barros, Fernão
Lopes de
Castanheda, António Galvão,
Gaspar Correia,
Duarte Barbosa, and Fernão
Mendes Pinto...
-
spelled Castaneda (without the tilde). In Portuguese, this name is
spelled Castanheda. The
surname can be
found primarily in Spain,
Portugal and the Americas...
-
survivors of the Tomé
Pires emb****y, most
likely written in 1524, and in
Castanheda's História do
descobrimento e
conquista da Índia
pelos portugueses (c....
-
Pedro Nunes,
Gomes Eanes de Zurara, João de Barros, Fernão
Lopes de
Castanheda,
Vasco Mouzinho de Quevedo, Jerónimo Corte-Real, and
Francisco de Sá de...
- Typ. da
Academia real das
sciencias de Lisboa, p.417 Fernão
Lopes de
Castanheda, 1552–1561 História do
Descobrimento e
Conquista da Índia
pelos Portugueses...
-
second squad, he adds Pêro
Rafael and
drops Antonio Fernandes.
Castanheda, p. 130
Castanheda's captains list is as above, with the
following variations: in...
- for the
country India itself". The 16th-century
Portuguese traveller Castanheda wrote of the
Keling community in
Melaka in the
period between 1528 and...
-
chroniclers confirm this
reason for the transition, e.g. Fernão
Lopes de
Castanheda (c. 1554)
notes that
Cabral "named it the land of Holy Cross, and that...
-
cattle and even
stray dogs in retaliation.
According to Fernão
Lopes de
Castanheda, the sack of
Dabul gave rise to a 'curse' on the
western coast of India...